Abstract

Hypoxia is known as a specific signal of various diseases, such as liver fibrosis. We designed a hypoxia-sensitive fluorometric approach that cleaved the azo bond (N═N) in the presence of hypoxia-controlled agents (sodium dithionite and azoreductase). 4-(2-Pyridylazo) resorcinol (Py-N═N-RC) bears a desirable hypoxia-responsive linker (N═N), and its azo bond breakup can only occur in the presence of sodium dithionite and azoreductase and leads to the release of 2,4-dihydroxyaniline, which can react with 3-[2-(2-aminoethylamino)ethylamino]propyltrimethoxysilane to generate yellow fluorescent silicon nanoparticles. This approach exhibited high selectivity and sensitivity toward both sodium dithionite and azoreductase over other potential interferences. The mouse liver microsome, which is known to contain azoreductase, was applied and confirmed the feasibility of the designed platform. Py-N═N-RC is expected to be a practical substrate for hypoxia-related biological analyses. Furthermore, silicon nanoparticles were successfully applied for Hela cell imaging owing to their negligible cytotoxicity and superb biocompatibility.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call